Snowden has admitted he's adept at counterintelligence measures to keep the Russians and Chinese from hacking into his stolen secrets, which suggests that he knows of (and most likely stole hard evidence of) the tactics, techniques and procedures employed by some of the most invasive nations on the planet.

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Snowden took part in a live Q&A chat, run by the Courage Foundation, on Thursday afternoon. He fielded all kinds of questions from a dedicated #AskSnowden Twitter stream.

User LibertyLynx — an outspoken critic of Russian intelligence, as well as the Snowden narrative — fired out three very telling quetions. They point to a side of Snowden's generous debate that rarely gets debated, with ominous implications.

#AskSnowden What have you done in Russia to counter their continued efforts to silence dissent via the very oppressive SORM?

This looming fortress, built in the 1980s as the KGB’s IT Center, forms a part of a row of buildings, known as the Lubyanka, where thousands of dissidents were imprisoned and interrogated back in the days of the feared Lavrentiy Beria, Stalin’s hated spymaster. Initially the Center was responsible for protecting computer networks and tracking down hackers, but in the late 2000s, it was tasked with monitoring social networks and the Internet as a whole.

Next question:

#AskSnowden At what point will you speak out on behalf of all the dead Russian whistleblowers, journalists and activists?

Now before this becomes a lament that everyone spies and so everyone else should just deal with it, I should say that people ought to make their governments answer for invasive surveillance (domestic or otherwise) programs.

The government ought to answer questions about its programs, demonstrate their efficacy, or else get rid of them.

Just as Snowden ought to answer questions about his narrative, demonstrate the efficacy of his motive, or else revise his statements.